West Sussex Gazette

Link between painting and film explored in new display

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Daniel Freaker: Scenes We’ve All Seen is a new exhibition at Chichester’sOxmarketC­ontemporar­y until June 5.

Gallery director Andrew Churchill said: “Since studying film Daniel Freaker has been exploring relationsh­ips between film and painting.

“The scenes he creates in his paintings are reminiscen­t of emotional films that have collective­ly inspired us and made us think about our own lives,whatwehave­experience­d and loved and lost.

“Like so many films that provoke sadness and joy, Freaker’s paintings provide a tension between those emotions through delicate moments that invoke a joy through the colours that celebrate the experience, but also lament its passing.

“Without a history or a future, dialogue or sounds, the paintings allow the audience to bring their own life to the paintings and share in a dialogue with their own experience­s.”

Daniel lives and works in Portsmouth.

He studied at Central Saint Martins, Camberwell and Slade schools of art. While there he explored the painterly qualities of print, video, film and photograph­y. He now concentrat­es on painting, where it is possible, to see the influences of his previous interests on the paintings in terms of cinematic compositio­n and subjects.

“His work is informed by contempora­ries such as Peter Doig, Luc Tuymans and Michael Armitage, sitting between the abstract and figurative spaces where the way paint is applied is equally as important as the image itself.”

Andrew added: “We are thrilled to have Daniel exhibiting with us this spring.

“His work masterfull­y blends both figurative and abstract elements in scenes that are both familiar and unnerving at the same time.

“Daniel’s work seems to be to be both utterly contempora­ry and, at the same time, timeless in its themes and atmosphere”.

“Daniel is based in Portsmouth and it is a particular pleasure to support an artist so local to us. As well as his paintings we will be exhibiting beautiful quality prints making his work widely affordable.

“The subjects are mostly individual­s, couples or groups of people in order to provoke thoughts of relationsh­ips or isolation.

"The scenes remind the audience of something they can empathise with and the techniques and colour palette bring feelings of sentiment and longing with a contempora­ry twist of warmth and radiance.

"While many elements are true to reality and show traditiona­l processes, some distortion­s, exaggerate the emotional significan­ce of the moment: connection, loss, vulnerabil­ity, or loneliness. This juxtaposit­ion between vibrancy and darkness is what makes it memorable.

“The work combines elements of abstract and expressive mark making with figurative details.

"Some details are defined and clear where others are more suggestive and evocative.”

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 ?? ?? Daniel Freaker’s show Scenes We’ve All Seen is at Chichester’s Oxmarket until June 4
Daniel Freaker’s show Scenes We’ve All Seen is at Chichester’s Oxmarket until June 4

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